PPZ2/YDR436W Summary Help

Standard Name PPZ2
Systematic Name YDR436W
Feature Type ORF, Verified
Description Serine/threonine protein phosphatase Z, isoform of Ppz1p; involved in regulation of potassium transport, which affects osmotic stability, cell cycle progression, and halotolerance; PPZ2 has a paralog, PPZ1, that arose from the whole genome duplication (1, 2, 3)
Name Description Protein Phosphatase Z 4
Chromosomal Location
ChrIV:1334821 to 1336953 | ORF Map | GBrowse
Gbrowse
Gene Ontology Annotations All PPZ2 GO evidence and references
  View Computational GO annotations for PPZ2
Molecular Function
Manually curated
Biological Process
Manually curated
Cellular Component
Manually curated
Regulatory Role
Regulatory modules predicted: stressResponse (517)
predicted: cellcycle (335)
predicted: stressResponse (517)
predicted: cellcycle (335)
Classical genetics
unspecified
Large-scale survey
null
overexpression
Resources
83 total interaction(s) for 51 unique genes/features.
Physical Interactions
  • Affinity Capture-MS: 22
  • Affinity Capture-RNA: 2
  • PCA: 2

Genetic Interactions
  • Dosage Rescue: 4
  • Negative Genetic: 21
  • Phenotypic Enhancement: 4
  • Positive Genetic: 7
  • Synthetic Growth Defect: 13
  • Synthetic Lethality: 2
  • Synthetic Rescue: 6

Resources
Expression Summary
histogram
Resources
Localization
Phosphorylation PhosphoGRID | PhosphoPep Database
Structure
Homologs
sequence information
ChrIV:1334821 to 1336953 | ORF Map | GBrowse
SGD ORF map
Last Update Coordinates: 2011-02-03 | Sequence: 1996-07-31
Subfeature details
Relative
Coordinates
Chromosomal
Coordinates
Most Recent Updates
Coordinates Sequence
CDS 1..2133 1334821..1336953 2011-02-03 1996-07-31
Retrieve sequences
Analyze Sequence
S288C only
S288C vs. other species
S288C vs. other strains
Resources
External Links All Associated Seq | E.C. | Entrez Gene | Entrez RefSeq Protein | MIPS | Search all NCBI (Entrez) | UniProtKB
Primary SGDIDS000002844
References cited on this page View Complete Literature Guide for PPZ2
1) Hughes V, et al.  (1993) Both isoforms of protein phosphatase Z are essential for the maintenance of cell size and integrity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae in response to osmotic stress. Eur J Biochem 216(1):269-79
2) Yenush L, et al.  (2002) The Ppz protein phosphatases are key regulators of K+ and pH homeostasis: implications for salt tolerance, cell wall integrity and cell cycle progression. EMBO J 21(5):920-9
3) Byrne KP and Wolfe KH  (2005) The Yeast Gene Order Browser: combining curated homology and syntenic context reveals gene fate in polyploid species. Genome Res 15(10):1456-61
4) Da Cruz e Silva EF, et al.  (1991) Protein phosphatase 2Bw and protein phosphatase Z are Saccharomyces cerevisiae enzymes. Biochim Biophys Acta 1089(2):269-72